Adds the interview with R Balasubramaniam

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layout: post
title: "OF PACTS AND FACTS #1 : AN OVERVIEW"
categories: [wona, column, cover]
categories: [wona, column]
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tag: Editorial
excerpt: It is something everyone talks about and takes a passing interest in. But when it comes to casting votes, most of the junta can be found feigning sweet slumber on that fateful Sunday morning. And hence, politics at IIT Roorkee inevitably boils down to a select set of kingmakers and their minions.

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title: "OF PACTS AND FACTS #2 - THE STRUCTURE"
categories: [wona, column, cover]
categories: [wona, column]
tag: Editorial
image: hidden
excerpt: In this piece, the second of a series, Watch Out! takes a look at the reasons behind this perception and at the reforms which have been announced to how the junta elects its representatives.

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title: "OF PACTS AND FACTS #3 : THE ANALYSIS"
categories: [wona, column, cover]
categories: [wona, column]
image: hidden
tag: Editorial
excerpt: The pre-existing power has been broken down to pieces and redistributed. But further empowerment has been ominously disregarded. Even more disturbingly, there has been no discussion of handing more power to the students. The system is still wholly patronizing, regarding a campus full of adults like petulant children unable to think for themselves.

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layout: post
title: "Interview with R. Balasubramaniam"
categories: [wona, column, cover]
tag: Editorial
image: rbalu.jpg
excerpt: Dr. Balu, a physician by qualification and a humanist by instincts has been an activist for more than three decades. His constructs of social movement to uplift the rural and tribal of our nation goes parallel with his academic accolades.
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Last Thursday, was one of those few evenings which witnessed the O.P. Jain Auditorium packed with ears, eyes and conscience, learning and engaging, to a brilliant talk delivered by Dr. R Balasubramaniam.
Dr. Balu, a physician by qualification and a humanist by instincts has been an activist for more than three decades. His constructs of social movement to uplift the rural and tribal of our nation goes parallel with his academic accolades. He holds a Masters in Public Administration degree from the Harvard Kennedy School and was the Frank H T Rhodes Professor at Cornell University and continues his professorship at some of the most distinguished centers of education.
The talk captivated the audience while Dr. Balu discussed at length about how we need to balance development with human capital growth and general living standards, before seeking digitalization and high GDP indicators. He focused on making our villages self-sufficient and gave statistical justification with his successful development work for people of Saragur in Mysore.
The talk was followed by the launch of his book “I, the citizen” by our Director, Prof. Banerjee. After this we had an interview with Dr. Balu on a joint panel with Geek Gazette. Here are excerpts from the same.
__Panel- At the age of 19 you founded the Swami Vivekananda Youth Movement, what spurred the enthusiasm in you to become an activist? Was there some defining moment that developed this radical in you?__
__R Balu:__ There is a huge personal story. I got 99.67% in PCM. I wanted to get into an IIT, become an engineer, but I wasn't as intelligent as you, I could not crack the exam. So I thought I would get into REC (now it is called NIT Surathkal). So I went there for my interview, I was waitlisted at 1. I wanted Computer Science because everybody in my generation wanted Computer Science. But there was only one seat for general merit and the guy with 100% got that. I was very disappointed so I just took some college in Bangalore called BMS College. When I went there I was so badly ragged that I never had the courage to go back to college the next day. Just near the college there was Ramakrishna Mission. So I went there, thought I would just loiter around and tell my parents that I am going to college. No courage to go to class, no money to go to the theatre; I spent some time at the mission, two days later, the swamijis there thought that I had come there to steal something so on the 3rd day I went into the library. And there I discovered Vivekananda - Changed my life!
There are 2 books by Vivekananda that I read at the library: Rousing Call to Hindu Nation and My message to the Youth, and I would say that every young man should read them!
__Panel- You have been teaching at some of the top notch universities in US and India. How are the students at the two places different?__
__R Balu:__ I think its the way our education system functions.I teach a course for undergraduate students at Cornell. I teach the same course for graduate students in India (IIM-B). I don't change anything, my content, quality, way of expression is the same. Every day after my class, I ask all students to write a reflection note. I want them to communicate, how did the lecture affect you, what was your mental mechanism during the lecture? If you give me two notes without names, I can tell which one is of an Indian student and that of an American student. An American student will actually reflect what I spoke. Now, that reflective thinking is ingrained in the educational system, at least in the USA. In India repetitive thinking in ingrained. Nobody needs to teach you reflection. You can start reflecting right now. If I were to ask you from what I spoke today, you would write it very nicely. But if I ask you how did it impact you, how did it change your life, you won't process it with the same competence. I am not saying repetition is bad, but reflection is better. So Indians should reflect before repeating, then sky's the limit.
__Panel: Even though we have large scale policies like Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan for imparting education, we lack abled teachers to implement it. What should we do to improve the standards of education in the country?__
__R Balu:__ The simple problem is that we dont look at teachers as an important component of the society. You give me a salary of 3000 rupees and want me to live in a village, educating children, I am not worried about the childs human capital I am worried about my own survival. So till we restore dignity in teaching, till we make it commercially equivalent to what a corporate professional with equivalent abilities will earn, it will be very difficult to get good motivated teachers. Why should a teacher who is creating the future of India get a menial salary? I think the socio-economic rewards should be visibly present more than just assuming that the teacher will be inspired to teach. See everybody is not here for the passion, we have a few passionate teachers but that does not bring about a change. So I think the fundamental prescription for India should be on how to make teaching profession get back its dignity, not just from a social construct, but also from an economic construct.
__Panel: As one of the elementary commitments of GRAAM*, you aim to impart education in the villages of our country. What is the vision to catalyse art and social sciences and bring them equivalent to technical subjects in the curriculum?__
__R Balu:__ I think we need to understand education is a combination of cognitive abilities. Were only focussing on maths, science etc. If you come to my school, it has got no doors and windows. It is an open structure. We create learning spaces. Our teachers are not called teachers, they are called Learning Facilitators, and they are expected to facilitate a balanced development of a child. And what do we facilitate, we facilitate acquisition of 5 basic intelligences- musical intelligence, mathematical intelligence, linguistic intelligence, intrapersonal intelligence, and interpersonal intelligence. We use different learning mechanisms to acquire these. If the child has acquired those intelligences then he has got the ability to acquire any information related to any field. We make our schools learning spaces, instead of making them teaching environments. Today we are only employing teachers, I want them to create impact educators. Thatll bring the fundamental paradigm difference.
__Panel- Let's say India was in anarchy, and you were suddenly appointed as the sole ruler, so what would be the one change you would like to bring as the first thing?__
__R Balu:__ I would give dignity back to Indians. I would make every Indian feel proud of the fact that he is an Indian. I would move the people away from a right based approach to a responsibility based approach. We all think of being an Indian as a matter of right, I think being an Indian is a matter of responsibility. It is what we need to give back, not what we need to take.
__Panel- Some last message you would want to give to the students of IIT-R?__
__R Balu:__ Learn to operate beyond the zones of your competence. Dont get stuck in the grooves of competence. Get out of your zones of comfort, and India would be a better place.

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